Yotam Ottolenghi and Sami Tamimi's Diasporic World

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Yotam Ottolenghi and Sami Tamimi's Diasporic World Jerusalem in London: Yotam Ottolenghi and Sami Tamimi’s Diasporic World Harry Kashdan Mashriq & Mahjar: Journal of Middle East and North African Migration Studies, Volume 6, Number 2, 2019, (Article) Published by Moise A. Khayrallah Center for Lebanese Diaspora Studies For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/778312/summary [ Access provided at 24 Sep 2021 01:02 GMT with no institutional affiliation ] Mashriq & Mahjar 6, no. 2 (2019) ISSN 2169-4435 Harry Kashdan JERUSALEM IN LONDON: YOTAM OTTOLENGHI AND SAMI TAMIMI’S DIASPORIC WORLD Abstract Prompted by the publishing phenomenon of Yotam Ottolenghi and Sami Tamimi’s Jerusalem cookbook, this paper considers the discourse(s) of place elaborated by an emergent network of Middle Eastern chefs-in-diaspora. Focusing on Ottolenghi and Tamimi’s Jerusalem and Ottolenghi cookbooks, I argue that cookbooks can be productively analyzed as literary objects with an actor-network methodology. The particular story presented by Ottolenghi and Tamimi’s work is one in which distinctions are repeatedly raised and then dismissed in order to find common ground between Israel and Palestine. Ottolenghi may be an Israeli Sephardi Jew and Tamimi a Palestinian Muslim, but both men are London expatriates and restaurateurs. The literary dimensions of their cookbooks attempt to harmonize personal narratives with the commercial forces at play in cookbook publishing: peace sells better than conflict, and diasporic nostalgia never goes out of style. The first Ottolenghi deli opened in a narrow space in London’s Notting Hill neighborhood in 2002. Over the past decade and a half, the chain has grown to include two additional delis and a flagship restaurant, as well as NOPI, a more formal restaurant, all in central London. In addition to supervising these establishments, Yotam Ottolenghi, the enterprise’s founder, has written and cowritten several best-selling cookbooks: Ottolenghi (2008), Plenty (2010), Jerusalem: A Cookbook (2012), Plenty More (2014), NOPI (2015) and, most recently, Sweet (2017).1 At the delis and on the Ottolenghi website one can also purchase a wide range of Ottolenghi-branded dry goods including herbs, spices, dried fruits, nuts, and lentils, signature Ottolenghi-prepared foods including cookies and granola, DVD recordings of Yotam Ottolenghi’s Mediterranean Feast, Mediterranean Island Feast, and Jerusalem on a Plate (all produced by Channel 4), and even a fetching Ottolenghi apron decorated with graphics from the Plenty More cookbook. Although the company now includes a number of partners, the major creative forces behind this furious activity remain Yotam Ottolenghi, who dreamed up the original deli, and Sami Tamimi, who has been head chef of the © Moise A. Khayrallah Center for Lebanese Diaspora Studies 2019 Harry Kashdan three delis and the flagship restaurant since the opening of the original Notting Hill location. Ottolenghi and Tamimi were born in the same city in the same year—Jerusalem, 1968—but they did not meet until a chance encounter at a London bakery in 1999. From their partnership has emerged a particular way with ingredients which emphasizes the fresh, sharp, and colorful with a flexible elegance that befits occasions ranging from a takeout dinner for the family to a catered brunch, and even Queen Elizabeth II’s jubilee. In contrast to the mainly literary production of other Middle Eastern food writers in diaspora—figures such as Claudia Roden and Greg Malouf, to mention two of the field’s best-known and most prolific authors—Ottolenghi and Tamimi’s cookbooks, restaurants, and products imbricate a literary diasporic network with one that is physically planted across London.2 I argue that this meeting of the literary and the physical allows for the creation of a reimagined version of the Jerusalem whence they departed, a diasporic Jerusalem that is indelibly marked by the affective contradictions of Ottolenghi and Tamimi’s relationships with their natal city. The Jerusalem they make available for London’s—and, via cookbooks and online sales, the world’s—consumption is the object of their nostalgic affection as well as an ambivalence that borders on resentment. This latter affect unsettles the commercial impulse of the Ottolenghi brand vis-à-vis the city of Ottolenghi and Tamimi’s birth. Ottolenghi and Tamimi’s diasporic world is created by the intermingling of their coauthored cookbooks, the Ottolenghi delis and product lines, and the literary and social networks which link Ottolenghi and Tamimi to other diasporic subjects. It manifests as a function of its simultaneous, conflicted expression across physical, literary, and social planes. In this paper I explore Ottolenghi and Tamimi’s diasporic world via close readings of their two coauthored cookbooks, Ottolenghi and Jerusalem. The modern cookbook is often a hybrid object, mixing bloated narrative prefaces, anecdotal introductions to individual recipes, cooking instructions, glossaries, photographs, and graphic design in a complicated form that resists categorization. In these volumes, paratext often outweighs text to such a degree that the reader must question whether the narratives or the recipes should be understood as the central component.3 Main authors are credited, but attendant upon cookbooks’ hybridity is a diffusion of authorship among creators who may or may not be named on covers, title pages, copyright pages, or within acknowledgements. The proper method of engaging with these cookbooks is similarly uncertain. Is a Jerusalem in London book like Jerusalem meant to be read closely or merely skimmed? Perhaps it is meant to be looked at more than read, or perhaps it should be approached from a utilitarian perspective, rather than experienced as art or literature. The methodology behind a scholarly approach to these books can be as complex as their forms. In my close readings I attempt to hold narrative, image, and recipe equally in mind while considering any single component. Meaning thus emerges from individual elements as well as the juxtaposition of media and genera within a single volume, or even on a single page. In describing these juxtapositions I borrow from codicology the term mise-en-page, which describes these arrangements especially in cases of joint, complex, and uncertain authorship.4 Mise-en-page demands attention to written, visual, and design features in concert. In codicology, this often entails considering scribal intervention, reader annotation, images, ornamentation, and the physical construction of the codex alongside the text proper. In close reading a cookbook, I suggest that such an approach helps us consider what aspects or features of the cookbook constitute its “text” to begin with. That is, given the photographic, narrative, and design content of many contemporary cookbooks, a reading that only considered the recipes around which these cookbooks are ostensibly organized would overlook the meanings cooperatively constructed by the various other elements at play. At times these elements work in concert with one another; other times, however, they present readers with paradoxes and oppositions that suggest new readings and interpretations.5 How the text is presented deeply affects the meaning(s) it makes. The assemblage of elements making up this type of cookbook involves a distribution of authorship which invites the toolkit of actor- network theory. In Bruno Latour’s formulation, actor-network theory is less a theoretical perspective than a methodology for tracing associations as they travel through shifting frames of reference, such as those of the Ottolenghi delis and cookbooks, the world of the Middle Eastern diaspora, the network of Middle Eastern diasporic food writers, and the London food scene.6 Both human and nonhuman actors are at work in these chains. An instructive example of a nonhuman actor is provided by olive oil, a major ingredient in the Ottolenghi pantry. Where a semiotic reading would be attentive to olive oil’s importance as a symbol of Middle Eastern food and even identity, an actor-network approach requires that we also consider the profusion of human labor invested in olive oil production, the choices of an individual recipe writer in adding olive oil to a dish, the Harry Kashdan predictable and unpredictable interactions of olive oil with other ingredients, and the choices of those who, using a cookbook, do or do not include the oil as a recipe directs. As Latour puts it, “any thing that does modify a state of affairs by making a difference is an actor.”7 Olive oil thus remains an avatar of the Middle East, but also acts as a mediator building and changing the discourse of Middle Eastern food through its every use. The oil is never only a static intermediary transmitting, unchanged, some pure idea of place or culture.8 In the case of a cookbook, authors, ingredients, and the physical book itself are all complex mediators. In a recent essay, Rita Felski proposes a method for adapting Latour’s sociological method to literary study. “Reading,” Felski suggests, can become a process in which “we do not probe below the surface of a text to retrieve disavowed or repressed meanings, nor do we stand back from a text to ‘denaturalize’ it and expose its social constructedness.” Instead, we might take a middle perspective, in which we interpret objects and texts as well as the networks between them, and “conceive of interpretation as a form of mutual making.”9 Returning to the question of what we do with a cookbook, this strange, quasi-literary
Recommended publications
  • Watermark University
    202Spring S1emester JANUARY THROUGH APRIL Hello and thank you for your interest in Watermark University - Spring Semester! The foundation of Watermark University (WU) is to provide meaningful opportunities to learn, teach and grow, resulting in a life of overall well-being. At The Watermark Brooklyn Heights, we pride ourselves in finding thought leaders throughout New York City and beyond to teach informative courses about a wide range of interesting and cutting edge topics. Research shows that learning and keeping our mind active and sharp supports healthy aging. At Watermark Retirement Communities® we are committed to encouraging our residents and associates to lead balanced lives, full of meaning and purpose, grounded in self-awareness and infused with curiosity. Our Watermark University courses help achieve this goal by inspiring us to go beyond our daily lives in finding ways we can truly thrive in our communities. By focusing on the Seven Dimensions of Well-being: Physical, Social, Intellectual, Spiritual, Emotional, Environmental, and Vocational we offer the opportunity to achieve a balanced life and we see the benefits across the country in every class, every day. Sincerely, Aaron Feinstein Aaron Feinstein Director of People, Arts and Culture COURSES FACULTY DAY AND TIME LOCATION Inside the World of Tuesday, January 19 • American Sign Language Sahar Edalati Performing Arts Center 4:00 PM (ASL) and Music Come and learn a new way to experience MUSIC through signs! In this beginner ASL course, participants will learn how to convey rhythm and emotions for a variety of musical genres. We will practice showing when the bass drops, soaring pop rock ballads, and a little bit of hip hop to name just a few.
    [Show full text]
  • Being a Yekke Is a Really Big Deal for My Mum! on the Intergenerational Transmission of Germanness Amongst German Jews in Israel
    Austausch, Vol. 2, Issue 1, July 2013 Being a Yekke is a really big deal for my mum! On the intergenerational transmission of Germanness amongst German Jews in Israel Dani Kranz (University of Erfurt, [email protected]) Throughout history, Germans1 have left German territory2 for different destinations worldwide, including: Eastern Europe; the United States; Australia, Africa and South America. Germans now constitute a global diaspora (cf. Schulze et. al. 2008). The vast majority of emigrants left German territory to seek a better life abroad. The new destinations attracted German emigrants with a mix of push and pull factors, with pull factors dominating. In the case of German emigrants there are sources depicting the maintenance and the transmission of Germanness, yet one group remains under-researched in this respect. This group is that of the German Jews.3 This article offers an in-depth, cross-generational case study of the transmission of Germanness of these ‘other Germans’ in the British mandate of Palestine and later Israel. While many German Jews left for the same destinations as other – non-Jewish - German emigrants, only a small number emigrated to the British mandate of Palestine (Rosenstock 1956, Stone 1997, Wormann 1970). By and large the vast bulk of all Jews from Germany fled to the British mandate as an effect of Nazi terror. Unlike previous waves of emigration, this move was forced upon them. It caused trauma (Viest 1977: 56) because it was determined by push factors, not by pull factors. This means that the vast majority of all German Jews who came to the British mandate of Palestine were refugees (Gelber & Goldstern 1988; Sela-Sheffy 2006, 2011; Viest 1977).
    [Show full text]
  • Oh! ONLY in JERUSALEM
    oh! ONLY IN JERUSALEM חוויה ירושלמית, מדריך A JERUSALEM EXPERIENCE GUIDE oh! ספטמבר SEPTEMBER 2011 בס"ד רק ירושלים ONLY IN JERUSALEM ....."וְעַל ּכֵן אֵלְֵך לְכָלרְ חֹוב ּופִ ּנָ ה, and therefore"..… ללְכָ ׁשּוק רוְחָצֵ הוְסִמְטָ וְגִּנָ ה, I will go to every street ןמֵחֻרְּבָ חֹומֹותַ יְִךּכָל אֶבֶן קְטַ ּנָ ה - in every corner every market and court and ּקֵאֲלַ ט ְו אֶ ׁשְ ֹ מ ר לְ מַ זְ ּכֶ רֶ ת " . alley and garden and the ruins of your walls every little stone I will collect and keep for memory". מתוך: מכורה שלי מאת: לאה גולדברג (From: Mechora Sheli (My homeland תרגום: רנה לי By: Lea Goldberg Translation: Rena Lee כתיבה תרגום ועריכה: אורנה גטניו שנייד :Writing, translations and editing עיצוב: אירה גינזבורג - מיתוג וניהול קריאטיב Orna Gattegno Schneid Ira Ginzburg Ltd. מעצבות: מיכל אורנבורג, גלית לופמן, יוליה :Graphic Design סתפאנוב, אולה לויצקי Designers: Michal Orenburg, Galit Lofman, Yulia Stepanov, עריכת תרגום: סוזן לב-דון Ola Levitsky הפקה: ציונה גת Translation editor: Susan E. Lev-Yadun בהשתתפות: גלית דהן קרליבך, Production: Ziona Gat סופרת ומורת דרך Contributor: Galit Dahan Carlibach, צילום: מיכל פטל, יח"צ Writer and tourist guide מו"ל: רות צפתי ,Photography:Michal Fattal מייל החברה: Daniel Bar-On, PR images [email protected] טלפקס: Publisher: Ruth Tzfaty 077-7876717 Company E-mail: [email protected] Telefax: 077-7876717 'רק ירושלים' מופיע באתר האינטרנט הירושלמי :Only in Jerusalem apears in the website www.allaboutjerusalem.com www.allaboutjerusalem.com המכיל צילומים על ירושלים, סרטוני וידאו, מסלולים, -which includes photographs of Jerusa אטרקציות, אירועים, אנקדוטות ועוד. ,lem, video clips, recommended tours attractions, events, anecdotes etc.
    [Show full text]
  • Retail Prices in a City*
    Retail Prices in a City Alon Eizenberg Saul Lach The Hebrew University and CEPR The Hebrew University and CEPR Merav Yiftach Israel Central Bureau of Statistics July 2017 Abstract We study grocery price differentials across neighborhoods in a large metropolitan area (the city of Jerusalem, Israel). Prices in commercial areas are persistently lower than in residential neighborhoods. We also observe substantial price variation within residential neighborhoods: retailers that operate in peripheral, non-a­ uent neighborhoods charge some of the highest prices in the city. Using CPI data on prices and neighborhood-level credit card data on expenditure patterns, we estimate a model in which households choose where to shop and how many units of a composite good to purchase. The data and the estimates are consistent with very strong spatial segmentation. Combined with a pricing equation, the demand estimates are used to simulate interventions aimed at reducing the cost of grocery shopping. We calculate the impact on the prices charged in each neighborhood and on the expected price paid by its residents - a weighted average of the prices paid at each destination, with the weights being the probabilities of shopping at each destination. Focusing on prices alone provides an incomplete picture and may even be misleading because shopping patterns change considerably. Specifically, we find that interventions that make the commercial areas more attractive and accessible yield only minor price reductions, yet expected prices decrease in a pronounced fashion. The benefits are particularly strong for residents of the peripheral, non-a­ uent neighborhoods. We thank Eyal Meharian and Irit Mishali for their invaluable help with collecting the price data and with the provision of the geographic (distance) data.
    [Show full text]
  • Israel's Magnificent Treasures
    GOING PLACES mbraced by a unique energy, Israel is so magical. Al fresco dining along Dorot Even long after one who has embarked on a journey Rishonim St. in Jerusalem Israel’s to this country is already somewhere else, say, in a chaotic urban jungle, one is still often visited by the Home to eight million people, Israel is made MAGNIFICENT Emore fascinatingvivid by how memory it intertwines of its magnificent thousands treasures. of years’ worth of history with modern-day life. This is evident in many forms In Jerusalem, which is probably the most visited site in including architecture, fashion, food, technology and art. It is also Israel because of its Old City, one can marvel in the 50-year-old important to note that this land of living history is the birthplace Artists Colony, a complex of artists’ and designers’ workshops TREASURES and galleries at the foot of the Old City’s Jaffa Gate. There, By PINKY S. ICAMEN / Photography by LUIS Espiritu, JR. and Ramon JOSEPH J. RUIZ traditional and antique crafts stand harmoniously alongside of manyThough technological ancient history innovations abounds like inthe Israel, traffic it navigation has only been app, modern and contemporary art. almostWaze, and 70 yearstoday’s since office it staple,was established the USB flash as a drive. state. It has seen Also in Jerusalem, one can find the bustling Mahane As one sets foot in Israel, Yehuda Market. In this marketplace also known as “The a country overflowing with the country has developed one of the world’s top-notch security culture, history and diversity, forcesconflicts to thatprotect are itsmostly people related and tourism,to religion which but because is said to of bethese, the falafel, bourekas (puff pastry) and rugelach, halva (a crumbly one can hear its heartbeat backbone of its economy.
    [Show full text]
  • The Future of the German-Jewish Past: Memory and the Question of Antisemitism
    Purdue University Purdue e-Pubs Purdue University Press Books Purdue University Press Fall 12-15-2020 The Future of the German-Jewish Past: Memory and the Question of Antisemitism Gideon Reuveni University of Sussex Diana University Franklin University of Sussex Follow this and additional works at: https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/purduepress_ebooks Part of the Jewish Studies Commons Recommended Citation Reuveni, Gideon, and Diana Franklin, The Future of the German-Jewish Past: Memory and the Question of Antisemitism. (2021). Purdue University Press. (Knowledge Unlatched Open Access Edition.) This document has been made available through Purdue e-Pubs, a service of the Purdue University Libraries. Please contact [email protected] for additional information. THE FUTURE OF THE GERMAN-JEWISH PAST THE FUTURE OF THE GERMAN-JEWISH PAST Memory and the Question of Antisemitism Edited by IDEON EUVENI AND G R DIANA FRANKLIN PURDUE UNIVERSITY PRESS | WEST LAFAYETTE, INDIANA Copyright 2021 by Purdue University. Printed in the United States of America. Cataloging-in-Publication data is on file at the Library of Congress. Paperback ISBN: 978-1-55753-711-9 An electronic version of this book is freely available, thanks to the support of librar- ies working with Knowledge Unlatched. KU is a collaborative initiative designed to make high-quality books Open Access for the public good. The Open Access ISBN for this book is 978-1-61249-703-7. Cover artwork: Painting by Arnold Daghani from What a Nice World, vol. 1, 185. The work is held in the University of Sussex Special Collections at The Keep, Arnold Daghani Collection, SxMs113/2/90.
    [Show full text]
  • Our Drop Off Catering Menu
    V E G A N D R O P O F F C A T E R I N G 201.885.4425 GREENCARTCATERING.COM Follow us on Instagram @greencartcatering Catering for Any Occasion D R O P - O F F C A T E R I N G M E N U Appetizers / Salads Ÿ Italian focaccia squares (serves 10-12) $50 Ÿ Hearts of palm ceviche with organic corn chips (serves 10-12) $50 Ÿ Cold sesame noodles with peanut sauce (serves 10-12) $50 Ÿ Cocktail tomatoes with tabouleh stuffing (serves 10-12) $50 Ÿ Green cart eggplant caponata with pita chips (serves 10-12) $50 Ÿ Stuffed “garlicky” cremini mushrooms (serves 10-12) $50 Ÿ Baked heirloom tomato with herb stuffing & vegan mozzarella $50/half dozen Ÿ Traditional garden salad with house dressing $50/bowl Ÿ Caesar salad with vegan caesar dressing $50/bowl Half Tray Whole Tray Ÿ Black bean, corn and avocado salad with cilantro dressing $50 $90 Ÿ Charred broccoli & red onion tossed with tomato and house dressing $50 $90 Ÿ Chilled corn salad with lime vinaigrette $50 $90 Ÿ Cold string bean salad $50 $90 Ÿ Cous cous salad with fresh vegetables and herbs $50 $90 Ÿ Cucumber salad with light olive oil dressing $50 $90 Ÿ Fattoush: traditional Arab salad with vegan yogurt dressing $50 $90 Ÿ Fennel salad $50 $90 Ÿ Italian style pasta salad $50 $90 Ÿ Italian style roasted beet salad with shallot dressing $50 $90 Ÿ Rainbow glass noodle salad with chili lime vinaigrette $50 $90 Ÿ Roasted potato salad with fresh herbs $50 $90 Ÿ Shredded carrot salad with raisins & cinnamon sugar dressing $50 $90 Ÿ Thai peanut qunioa salad $50 $90 Ÿ Three bean chipotle salad $50 $90 Ÿ Tomato,
    [Show full text]
  • The the the the the the The
    the Volume 31, Number 7 March 2012 TEMPLE BETH ABRAHAM Adar / Nisan 5772 Volume 34, Number 9 • June/July/August 2015 Sivan/Tammuz/Av/Elul 5775 R R R R R R R R i i i i i i i i Pu M DIRECTORY SERVICES SCHEDULE GENERAL INFORMATION: All phone numbers use (510) prefix unless otherwise noted. Services, Location, Time Monday & Thursday Mailing Address 336 Euclid Ave. Oakland, CA 94610 Morning Minyan, Chapel, 8:00 a.m. Hours M-Th: 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Fr: 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Friday Evening Office Phone 832-0936 (Kabbalat Shabbat), Chapel, 6:15 p.m. Office Fax 832-4930 Shabbat Morning, Sanctuary, 9:30 a.m. E-Mail [email protected] Candle Lighting (Friday) Gan Avraham 763-7528 May 1, 7:41 p.m. Bet Sefer 663-1683 May 8, 7:48 p.m. STAFF May 15, 7:54 p.m. May 22, 8:00 p.m. Rabbi (x 213) Mark Bloom Richard Kaplan, May 29, 8:05 p.m. Cantor [email protected] Torah Portions (Saturday) Gabbai Marshall Langfeld May 2, Acharei-Kedoshim Executive Director (x 214) Rayna Arnold May 9, Emor Office Manager (x 210) Virginia Tiger May 16, Behar-Bechukotai Bet Sefer Director Susan Simon 663-1683 May 23, Bamidbar Gan Avraham Director Barbara Kanter 763-7528 May 30, Naso Bookkeeper (x 215) Kevin Blattel Facilities Manager (x 211) Joe Lewis Kindergym/ Dawn Margolin 547-7726 Toddler Program TEMPLE BETH ABRAHAM Volunteers (x 229) Herman & Agnes Pencovic OFFICERS OF THE BOARD is proud to support the Conservative Movement by affiliating with The United President Mark Fickes 652-8545 Synagogue of Conservative Judaism.
    [Show full text]
  • {Download PDF} the Book of New Israeli Food Ebook Free Download
    THE BOOK OF NEW ISRAELI FOOD PDF, EPUB, EBOOK Janna Gur | 304 pages | 26 Aug 2008 | Schocken Books | 9780805212242 | English | New York, United States The Book of New Israeli Food by Janna Gur: | : Books A modern-day classic and a personal favorite, this cookbook is written by power foodie Janna Gur and her team, with gorgeous photos by Eilon Paz. In Jerusalem, London-based celebrity chef Yotam Ottolenghi and then partner Sami Tamimi rehash their Jerusalem childhoods from different sides of the tracks with equal warmth and character, while giving a complete history of the volatile city and showing off its most charming corners through positively stunning photography. Sure, the recipes might contain an eclectic mix of 20 ingredients, but they are all fresh, wholesome and inspiring. This book belongs on every coffee table, if only as a discussion piece, and for its celebration of Sephardic cuisine. The scrumptiously delicious and herbaceously rich recipes are only a bonus. From Israeli baker Uri Scheft of the famous Breads Bakery, which has several branches in both New York City and Tel Aviv, this book covers a wide range of influences on Israeli baking and includes hundreds of bread recipes, alongside other beloved Israeli baked goods such as Krembo and hamentaschen both with updated twists. This book focuses on historical fact and culture as much as the beautiful and more remotely found dishes and stories of the region. This homey book comes from the New York-based Israeli chef who brought gourmet falafel and upscale Israeli dining to America with her popular restaurants, Balaboosta , Taim and Bar Bolonat.
    [Show full text]
  • Well-Being Calendar April Edition
    WELL-BEING CALENDAR APRIL EDITION WHY DO WE NEED THIS? In the midst of the turbulent, ever-changing broadcasts & headlines, it’s very easy to lose sight of keeping our mental & physical health in check, even if it’s something as simple as walking more than 20 steps a day or even if it’s just taking a deep breath. In an attempt to balance schoolwork with the calendar, we’ve decided to provide you with a 4-week calendar, ensuring that your social, emotional & physical needs are met. Whether it's something you haven’t done before, or something you haven’t been paying attention to. This calendar is a compilation of physical & mental activities catering to all age groups. These activities rekindle life into the entire family’s overlapping schedules, allowing for memorable moments to be created. Pleas feel free to capture these moments and share them with us on our Wellbeing Instagram page: @fieldnotesofmentality WEEK 1 JOKES AND HUMOUR We all know that April begins with April Fools Day, a day filled with harmless jokes, fun and laughter. But what is stopping us from having a sense of humour every day? • Laughter not only just lightens our body but also boost up the human immune system by increasing infection fighting antibodies. • Laughter helps in relieving our anger, depression, tension and stress and make us feel light and irritation free. • Laughter is the easiest and the quickest way to overcome conflicts and promote strong relationships. • Laughter brings out the lighter side of our personality and also allows us to express our feelings without any hesitation.
    [Show full text]
  • Graduate Center. Spring 2018. Doctoral Program in History
    1 City University of New York – Graduate Center. Spring 2018. Doctoral Program in History/Master’s Program in Middle Eastern Studies Room: Course Number: HIST 78110/MES 74500 Tuesday: 6:30 – 8:30 PM. Course Instructor: Simon Davis, [email protected] Office Phone: (718) 289 5677. Palestine Under The British Mandate: Origins, Evolutions and Implications, 1906-1949. This course examines how and with what consequences British interests at the time of the First World War identified and pursued control over Palestine, the subsequent forms such projections took, the crises which followed and their eventual consequences. Particular themes will be explored through analytical discussions of assigned historiographic materials, chiefly recent journal literature. Learning Objectives: Students will be encouraged to evaluate still-contested historical phenomena such as British undertakings with Zionism, colonialist relationships with Arab Palestine, institution-making and economic development, social and cultural transformations, resistance and political violence. This will be understood in the broader context of Middle Eastern politics in the era of late European colonial imperialism. Consonant and particular local experience in Palestine will also be addressed, exploring the effect of British Mandatory administration, especially in ethnic and sectarian-inflected questions of status, social and material conditions, identity, community, law and justice, expression and political rights. Finally, how and why did the Mandate end in a British debacle, Zionist triumph and Arab Palestinian catastrophe, with what main legacies resulting? On the basis of these studies students will each complete a research essay from the list below, along with a number of smaller critical exercises, and a final examination.
    [Show full text]
  • Download All Beautiful Sites
    1,800 Beautiful Places This booklet contains all the Principle Features and Honorable Mentions of 25 Cities at CitiesBeautiful.org. The beautiful places are organized alphabetically by city. Copyright © 2016 Gilbert H. Castle, III – Page 1 of 26 BEAUTIFUL MAP PRINCIPLE FEATURES HONORABLE MENTIONS FACET ICON Oude Kerk (Old Church); St. Nicholas (Sint- Portugese Synagoge, Nieuwe Kerk, Westerkerk, Bible Epiphany Nicolaaskerk); Our Lord in the Attic (Ons' Lieve Heer op Museum (Bijbels Museum) Solder) Rijksmuseum, Stedelijk Museum, Maritime Museum Hermitage Amsterdam; Central Library (Openbare Mentoring (Scheepvaartmuseum) Bibliotheek), Cobra Museum Royal Palace (Koninklijk Paleis), Concertgebouw, Music Self-Fulfillment Building on the IJ (Muziekgebouw aan 't IJ) Including Hôtel de Ville aka Stopera Bimhuis Especially Noteworthy Canals/Streets -- Herengracht, Elegance Brouwersgracht, Keizersgracht, Oude Schans, etc.; Municipal Theatre (Stadsschouwburg) Magna Plaza (Postkantoor); Blue Bridge (Blauwbrug) Red Light District (De Wallen), Skinny Bridge (Magere De Gooyer Windmill (Molen De Gooyer), Chess Originality Brug), Cinema Museum (Filmmuseum) aka Eye Film Square (Max Euweplein) Institute Musée des Tropiques aka Tropenmuseum; Van Gogh Museum, Museum Het Rembrandthuis, NEMO Revelation Photography Museums -- Photography Museum Science Center Amsterdam, Museum Huis voor Fotografie Marseille Principal Squares --Dam, Rembrandtplein, Leidseplein, Grandeur etc.; Central Station (Centraal Station); Maison de la Berlage's Stock Exchange (Beurs van
    [Show full text]